Steelers' 2 point Conversion Strategy

They tried for 2 pt conversions ...

Huge that our D didn't let them convert a single 2 pt attempt.

We won by 5.

I wish our D hadnot given them so many chances for going for 2 point conversion, a bit too much for my liking . :rolleyes:
 
They've probably done research that shows, in the aggregate, it either evens out or gives you a slight advantage.
 
Since they changed the rules to allow a failed conversion to be returned for points, is there ever a reason to not do your utmost not to get tackled after making an interception, i.e. lateral the ball, etc.?
Carr should have lateraled the ball......no sense in getting tackled 1/2 way there
 
They've probably done research that shows, in the aggregate, it either evens out or gives you a slight advantage.

Possibly, but I wonder how many attempts does it take for it to go in your favor and if it is worth it to try in any given game?
 
Possibly, but I wonder how many attempts does it take for it to go in your favor and if it is worth it to try in any given game?
I'm not sure I understand the premise. If the Steelers made 70% of their 2 point conversions, their expected points after touchdown is 1.4 points per TD. That's much higher than if they make 100% of their field goals (1 point extra per TD)
 
They tried for 2 pt conversions 4 times. That's 4 points they left off the board by doing that. Had they converted on just 2 of them, they'd have gotten the 4 points back. But they didn't.

Huge that our D didn't let them convert a single 2 pt attempt. Also holding them to 3 FG attempts was huge. They made 2 FG's and missed 1. If Pitt had scored on a single 1 of those 2 pt attempts and scored a TD instead of being held to a FG on just 1 of those 3 FG attempts, that's a 6 point difference.

We won by 5.
If we go for it on 4th and 1 instead of kicking it then we have another td instead of 3 points. It goes both way. They didn't make the plays to win, we did. Stop with the ifs
 
I'm not sure I understand the premise. If the Steelers made 70% of their 2 point conversions, their expected points after touchdown is 1.4 points per TD. That's much higher than if they make 100% of their field goals (1 point extra per TD)

Except you can't get 1.4 pts after each TD you can only get 0,1 or 2. It may go in your favor after a certain number of tries, but you aren't guaranteed to reach that N in any given game. So the reward may outweigh the risk over the course of a season, but does it in any given game, as at the moment you decide to go for 2 (in a situation in which it is not dictated by game situation, such as after the Steelers' first two TDs), you do not know what your N size will be in that game. And yes, I just confused myself....
 
Except you can't get 1.4 pts after each TD you can only get 0,1 or 2. It may go in your favor after a certain number of tries, but you aren't guaranteed to reach that N in any given game. So the reward may outweigh the risk over the course of a season, but does it in any given game, as at the moment you decide to go for 2 (in a situation in which it is not dictated by game situation, such as after the Steelers' first two TDs), you do not know what your N size will be in that game. And yes, I just confused myself....
Statistically, though, they should probably go for it almost every time. It's low risk. There are a ton of other things Pittsburgh could have done to win that game.
 
They've been doing this since the new XP rule last year. The math is pretty straightforward. the XP is about a 94% proposition. If you think your odds are significantly better than 47% of making the 2-pointer, you should do it (ignoring late-game game-score-based decisions). If you don't, you should kick the XP.

The Steelers were much much better than 50% when they tried it last year. They bought themselves a lot of points that way. We should be praising the Dallas D for stopping the Steelers at something they're good at, not laughing at them for a "dumb" strategy.

I'm surprised more teams don't go for 2 more often. (Ha! I'm not really surprised. Nobody is more conservative than NFL coaches).


Exactly. Sorry to say see so much lack of understanding in this thread.
 
Well, since they pushed it back, it is only around 94-95%. If you feel that a 2 point conversion is a 50/50 proposition, it is better to go for 2.

Not unless you are guaranteed to get two tries per game. (Said the guy who failed Algebra).
 

Staff online

Forum statistics

Threads
474,114
Messages
14,513,855
Members
24,208
Latest member
CowboysQC
Back
Top